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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel deeply hurt and unsupported by my boyfriend (20w pregnant, toddler, both full time jobs)

62 replies

Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 13:25

I’m 37, 20 weeks pregnant with my second, and have a 19-month-old DD with my boyfriend (45). We both work full time. We’ve been together for nearly 7 years.

He does nothing around the house. No cleaning, cooking, shopping, laundry, or general household management. I do all of it. I also handle everything for DD, including all pick-ups, drop-offs, night wakes, feeding, and bedtime. He might drop her off once a month if I ask and it fits his schedule.

He works long hours, comes home close to midnight, and often stays up until 2–3 a.m. trading or watching porn. I’m up early with DD, working from home, juggling my job and housework, and then doing full-time parenting until bedtime.

Weekends aren’t much different, he sleeps till midday, then might play with DD while I cook or tidy, he works (few hours from home) most weekends. He’s rarely taken her out alone to give me a break (since she was born, a handful of times for 1 hour max).

Financially:
He earns twice what I do. He covers rent, bills, half the food shop, and nursery fees. I pay for DD’s clothes, food, car-related costs, nanny, health insurance, and most household items. We aren’t married (he doesn’t want to because of his childhood trauma with his parents), so his savings, investments, and pension are his alone.

A few month ago, he gave me £5k as a gift to help with a house purchase that would be in my name but for both of us to live in. The agreement was that he would live there rent-free, since he didn’t want to co-own anything or contribute to the mortgage. The £5k was meant to help with legal fees and strengthen my mortgage application.

That house purchase didn’t go through because my flat hasn’t sold yet (one bed, fully paid out, on my name. It was rented but now empty and back on the market), I’m still looking and considering various options including let to buy, and he knows that. Then two days ago, out of nowhere, I get a text from him at 8pm asking for the £5k back. I panicked and asked if everything was okay he said yes, he just needed it to cover a trading margin and “you’re an adult, you can take care of yourself.”

That line broke me. I always thought we were a partnership, that we take care of each other. I cried myself to sleep past couple of days. I feel misunderstood and unappreciated. I’ve sacrificed and continue to (as most do so I’m not special) to make this work, time, rest, social life, health, while his life hasn’t really changed.

We haven’t been on holiday in over three years, barely go out, and DD has only been to a cafe twice in her life. He’s constantly worried about losing his job, which I understand but who isn’t!

I do love him, he’s loyal (I think), clever, and loves our daughter. He does pay for a lot of stuff. But feel so alone, exhausted, and resentful.

Am I missing something? Is this fair? What would you do in my situation?

OP posts:
MrsLizzieDarcy · 25/10/2025 09:28

Well he won the perfect girlfriend lottery, didn't he? And you won the booby prize....

Walk away before you're 4 kids in and simmering with resentment at Mr No Commit.

wordywitch · 25/10/2025 09:35

Stop doing anything for him - cooking, laundry, etc. and when he complains and asks why, text him to say ‘You’re an adult, you can take care of yourself’.

Seriously though, you have been taken for an absolute ride. You’re not in a ‘traditional’ relationship if you’re also working full time and are not married. You’ve been foolish and naive, time to grow a spine and tell him what for or leave. Your life will be a misery otherwise.

Lilyowl · 25/10/2025 09:35

No amount of money that he provides means you deserve to be treated like shit. Does he think he can buy your slavery? You are not a slave.

I'm a SAHM, and my husband helps 50/50 with house and children when he's not working. He also shares everything with me 50/50 financially.

I would say at the very least, keep your job as the man you are with is not a safe person to financially depend on.

IsitaHatOrACat · 25/10/2025 09:53

Imagine if you had just started dating and met a guy like this. He wouldnt getca second date would he? Beware of the sunk cost fallacy

QuickPeachPoet · 25/10/2025 10:03

having a second child with this man was a good idea because......

NimbleDreamer · 25/10/2025 10:43

"Traditional roles"... don't make me laugh. How is this a traditional marriage/relationship when you both work full time? 😅 What would be traditional is if you stayed at home and took care of the house and children, and he provided, AND you are married so you have some legal and financial protection. Not you working full time as well whilst doing absolutely everything around the house and with the children.

Why do women put up with this? Surely the D can't be that good.

estellacandance · 25/10/2025 10:49

Leave before the baby’s born and don’t register the birth.

You dont want him controlling you for the next 18 years.

He’s awful & only going to get worse. You and your dc deserve better.

Sartre · 25/10/2025 10:57

You’re in a better position than some women in that you have your own property. Granted, it isn’t big enough in the long term but for now as a stop gap it will be fine. You also have a full time job so can support yourself. I would be leaving him. He doesn’t respect you in the slightest and the aversion to marriage is so you won’t take any of “his” money when you split. He’s a total twat.

Fitzcarraldo353 · 25/10/2025 11:27

DjCatnip · 25/10/2025 09:13

Cover a trading margin...
Does that mean he's lost £5000 on "trading"?

Porn user, gambler, doesn't support you. You need to run while you can.

Indeed. He's not 'trading'. He's gambling. In this case it's actually a good thing you're not married as he's gambling away his cash. This will only get worse.

user793847984375948 · 25/10/2025 11:44

Why don't you just move out and do what you're doing but without him around bringing you down?

Thundertoast · 25/10/2025 12:16

Oh OP.
I think you need to ask yourself whether your child would want a present, involved dad, or a 'traditional' one where they barely have any relationship. Your babies will love him because he's their dad, but this will unravel when they get older and its really shit. And is that really what you want to teach your kids? You all deserve so much more.

Francine84 · 25/10/2025 15:26

Do you want your kids growing up thinking this toxic relationship dynamic is normal? Because that’s what they’ll see, and that will be their view of what a relationship is. An unequal mess where their dad isn’t interested in doing his share and has no respect for their mum.

I don’t think you’ll leave OP but firmly believe that you should. You deserve better.

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